Domino’s: Forget Selling, Make it Easy to Buy
Yesterday I wrote about looking at what you sell with new eyes and finding ways to simplify the buying process for your customer. To spur your creativity I am going to tell you what another company is doing to simplify a process they invented.
For years, I have written off Domino’s pizza as “college pizza” or the pizza you order when you are too broke to order anything else. After looking online for pizza delivery one night, I decided to give Domino’s a shot for nostalgia purposes alone.
What I found on their site was an evolution of Domino’s original pizza delivery model, making plain old pizza delivery arguably more personal, more consistent and flat out easier on the buyer. I got my pizza and another great example of making buying easy all in 30 minutes or less and I am happy to say their idea was more innovative than finding a new place to stuff cheese.
Domino’s pioneered pizza delivery and in the process brought about the age old process of keeping a stack of expired pizza coupons in the drawer by the telephone, scouring the coupon sections of telephone books, calling in and asking about the specials, placing your order and getting the standard 40 minutes to an hour estimated delivery time. Domino’s changed all that by integrating online ordering like their competitors, but unlike their competitors, they developed the “Pizza Tracker” (see image.)
I was able to build my pizza with a simple graphic interface; my coupon was automatically deducted from my purchase price, I confirmed my order and paid in less than two minutes. It was an easy process that started delivering unexpected value for me as soon as the “Pizza Tracker” loaded up.
The “Pizza Tracker” tells me that Li is doing the prep work on my pizza and shows my pizza moving from the Prep phase through the Bake phase and Box phase. At 5:21 Li hands my pizza off to Scott who departs the store at 5:23 and arriving at my house at 5:33 with a ring of the doorbell.
- No more calling.
- No more errors relaying the order.
- No more coupons to track.
- No more wondering where your pizza is.
- No more calling back an hour later realizing they forgot your order or made it carry out by mistake.
- As a bonus, you get the names of the people that are working to make and deliver your pizza.
The pizza met my expectations, it was the easiest order I have ever placed, and I got unexpected value out of the “Pizza Tracker” feature that was just part of the transaction. Getting to see my order processed in real time by real people made me feel more confident that my order was going to be correct, and get to me on time. More importantly, I will likely be back to order again.
Not resting on their success, Domino’s has found yet another way to simplify the pizza purchase process. Forget the computer, that is so 400 words ago, now all I need is a remote and my TiVo.
If Domino’s can improve the art of pizza delivery, how can you improve the process of buying your product for your customer? Can you make a change that brings a measurable competitive advantage and wins additional loyalty from your customer base?
*Domino’s Pizza is the world’s largest pizza delivery company with 19% of the domestic pizza delivery market, inventing the pizza delivery category. Pizza Hut, largest company by sales, holds 17% of the domestic pizza delivery market, Papa John’s nails down third with a comfortable 10%. Source: Domino’s Investor Presentation – April 2008
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http://saleslaundry.com/2009/08/14/big-thinking-on-moving-your-sales-from-now-to-wow/ Big Thinking on Moving Your Sales From Now to “Wow” | Sales Laundry

